A phase 3 randomized study to evaluate safety and immunogenicity of 20-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine in healthy Japanese infants.

Journal: International Journal Of Infectious Diseases : IJID : Official Publication Of The International Society For Infectious Diseases
Published:
Abstract

Objective: Safety and immunogenicity evaluation of a 4-dose series with 20-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV20).

Methods: This phase 3, double-blind study randomized healthy Japanese infants to receive 4 doses (3 infant doses, 1 toddler dose) of PCV20 by subcutaneous (SC) or intramuscular (IM) injection or 13-valent PCV (PCV13) SC. A primary immunogenicity objective was to demonstrate noninferiority of PCV20 SC to PCV13 SC for percentages of participants meeting predefined serotype-specific immunoglobulin G concentrations 1 month after Dose 3. The 7 additional PCV20 serotypes were compared with the lowest vaccine serotype result in the PCV13 group. Safety and tolerability were assessed as the primary safety objective.

Results: Overall, 668 participants were randomized (PCV20 SC, n = 226; PCV13 SC, n = 224; PCV20 IM, n = 218). The primary noninferiority objective for PCV20 SC to PCV13 SC was met for 11/13 matched and 5/7 additional serotypes. Additional data showed PCV20 SC and IM elicited robust functional opsonophagocytic activity and boosting responses to all 20 vaccine serotypes. PCV20 had a similar safety/tolerability profile to PCV13, although local reactions were less frequent with PCV20 IM.

Conclusions: A 4-dose series of PCV20 SC or IM elicited immune responses expected to be protective against all 20 serotypes in Japanese infants. NCT04530838.

Authors
Yasunori Ishihara, Mitsuru Fukazawa, Shinya Enomoto, Richard De Solom, Masako Yamaji, Mary Kline, Masakazu Aizawa, Yahong Peng, Osamu Kogawara, Peter Giardina, Noor Tamimi, William Gruber, Wendy Watson
Relevant Conditions

Strep Throat